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WASHINGTON, Feb. 11 (Xinhuanet) -- The United States
on Friday rejected the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK)'s demands
for direct talks over its nuclear weapons program and insisted on six-party
negotiations.
"It's not an issue between North
Korea and the United States; it's a regional issue," said White House spokesman
Scott McClellan.
"There's plenty of opportunities for North Korea to
speak directly with us in the context of the six-party talks," he said.
The DPRK has demanded bilateral talks with Washington
to defusethe tension created by its announcement that it is a nuclear
power,Pyongyang's UN envoy said in a South Korean newspaper Friday.
"We will return to the six-nation talks when we see a
reason todo so and the conditions are ripe,'' Han told Seoul's Hankyoreh
newspaper in an interview published Friday.
"If the United States moves to have direct dialogue
with us, wecan take that as a signal that the United States is changing its
hostile policy toward us."
The US State Department reiterated on Thursday that
the six-party talks continue to be "the best, most effective way" to
solvenuclear disputes on the Korean Peninsula.
Washington made the statement after Pyongyang
admitted on Thursday for the first time that it has nuclear weapons, and said it
would not return to six-party talks designed to persuade Pyongyang to abandon
its nuclear weapons programs.
The US intelligence believe that Pyongyang has
produced one andpossibly two nuclear weapons.
Since August 2003, China, the US, the DPRK, Russia,
South Koreaand Japan have held three rounds of talks in Beijing aimed at
peacefully resolving the nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula. ButPyongyang
refused to attend the fourth round of talks scheduled for last September, citing
hostile US policy. Enditem |